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Wine and
the Expecting Mother
(Daniel Rogov wrote this politically incorrect, but thought
provoking article)
Since
1990 every bottle of wine, beer and spirits sold in the United
States has carried the warning that according to the
Surgeon General, women should not drink alcoholic beverages
during pregnancy because of the risk of birth defects. If
that has not been enough to add to the anxiety of women already
concerned about their own health and the health of their fetuses,
hundreds of newspaper articles and TV talk shows have been
devoted to convincing women that if they have even a single drink
during their pregnancy that there is a chance that their baby
will be born deformed, addicted to alcohol or retarded.
It seems, however, as if the American
government, medical authorities and media have not been telling
American women the entire truth. Although the official message is
dont drink at all during pregnancy, a great
deal of recent research and a re-examination of the
alcohol-pregnancy issue show that there is no conclusive evidence
to demonstrate that moderate drinking during pregnancy can harm
the fetus.
According to Drs. David Whitten and
Martin Lipp of the University of California at San Francisco,
the campaign against drinking during pregnancy started in
1973 when several studies showed that heavy drinking during
pregnancy can cause a condition known as Fetal Alcohol
Syndrome. These studies demonstrated that the
children of many alcoholic mothers were born with a cluster of
severe birth defects. What the government conveniently
chose to ignore say Whitten and Lipp, is that this
syndrome is extremely rare, occurring only 3 times in 100,000
births, and only when the mother drinks abusively throughout her
pregnancy.
Lipp and Whitten, whose To Your Health
was published in 1995, are among an increasing number of doctors
and researchers who feel that pregnant women have no reason to
fear drinking a glass of wine every day. As revealed by
contributing editor Thomas Matthews in the August 31, 1994 issue
of the Wine Spectator magazine, which was devoted largely to this
controversy, there is even new research that shows that
moderate drinking during pregnancy may actually help the
development of the child after birth.
No one questions the fact that the
consumption of large amounts of alcohol during pregnancy can harm
the fetus. It has been well established, for example, that the
children of women who drink more than 3 - 4 glasses of wine daily
show significant decreases in birth weight and length than of
women who drink 1 - 2 glasses daily, and it is generally accepted
that having five or more drinks per day is especially dangerous
to the fetus. Here, however, agreement ends, and Genevieve
Knupfer of the Alcohol Research Group in Berkeley, California
says that part of the problem comes about because many of the
studies that reported adverse effects on the fetus used imprecise
methodology. In several studies, for example, researchers
arbitrarily defined heavy drinkers as those women who
consumed more than one glass of wine daily.
Feeling even more strongly, Dr. Michael
Samuels of New York Citys Doctors Hospital says that
the data has been turned around for the purpose of
frightening women, and indicates that birth defects of any
kind occur in 3 - 5% of babies born in the United States and only
1 - 2% of those can be related to alcohol. Based on the data of
Samuels and other medical researchers, it becomes clear that less
than 0.1% of all birth defects are related to alcohol, and that
more than 90% of the affected children are born to women with a
history of alcohol abuse.
Not
a single study carried out since the mid-1980s has shown a
direct correlation between moderate alcohol consumption and birth
defects. One study, of 33,300 California women showed that
although 47% drank moderately during their pregnancies, not one
of their babies met the criteria for Fetal Alcoholic Syndrome!
The authors of this study concluded that alcohol at
moderate levels is not a significant cause of malformation in our
society and that the position that moderate consumption is
dangerous is completely unjustified.
Some studies go as far as to indicate
that light to moderate drinking may actually improve the chance
of successful pregnancies. A 1993 study published in the American
Journal of Epidemiology by Ruth Little and Clarence
Weinberg concluded, for example, that there were fewer
stillbirths and fewer losses of fetus due to early labor among
women who consumed a moderate level of alcohol. That some alcohol
can be protective against pre-term birth is also supported by Dr.
Martha Direnfeld of Haifa University who points out that alcohol
is known to stop unwanted uterine contractions, and thus has
saved many pregnancies that might otherwise have
spontaneously aborted. Moreover, Dr. Robert Sokol of the
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse in Detroit has shown that it
is light drinkers and not abstainers who have the best chance of
having a baby of optimal birth weight! In their book Alcohol and
the Fetus, Doctors Henry Rosset and Lynn Wiener have presented
data that shows that children of moderate drinkers tend to score
highest on developmental tests at the age of 18 months.
Despite these and many other findings,
the United States government, the AMA, the BMA (British) and the
vast majority of American and English doctors continue to
recommend complete abstention from wine, beer and spirits during
pregnancy. An examination of why this is true reveals that the
issue is as emotional, ideological and political as it is
medical. Well respected wine writer Jancis Robinson, has declared
that in this, our male dominated society, men feel entitled
to lecture pregnant women on how they should best discharge their
responsibilities to their unborn children. In a similar
tone, Katha Pollit, writing in The Nation, claimed that all
of these warnings allow the government to appear to be concerned
about babies without having to spend any money, change any
priorities or challenge any vested interests.
No one argues that alcohol consumption
during pregnancy, is totally risk-free, but as Thomas Matthews
stated in his article in the Wine Spectator, it is
important to ask: risky when compared to what? In her
recently published book The Myths of Motherhood,
Shary Turner indicates that alcohol is far from the only risk
factor pregnant women are warned against. Other risky
items include caffeine, chocolate, raw oysters, unpasteurized
cheese, tropical fruits, drugs that alleviate cold symptoms, nail
polish, suntan lotion and hair dye, all of which in some amount
may harm the fetus. Turners conclusion is that the
only risk free pregnancy is one that is meant less to benefit the
baby than to imprison the mother in anxiety and
self-reproach.
In the absence of 100% certainty about
the issue, many continue to insist that abstinence is the best
advice to give pregnant women. Others, however, see this attitude
as illogical and have concluded that the risks and benefits
associated with light to moderate regular wine consumption
compare quite favorably with most other activities of daily life.
Doctors Whitten and Lipp write that light, regular wine
consumption, or one or two glasses of table wine per day can be
part of the healthy lifestyle for most people, including pregnant
women. Gynecologists Howard Carp and Martha Direnfeld also
feel that women who drank healthfully before pregnancy are not
endangering their fetuses if they go on drinking in the same way
during pregnancy. Dr. Carp states an occasional glass of
wine or any other drink is fine, no problem at all, and those
women who drink a glass of wine once or twice a week with their
meals should not feel any guilt or fear at all. Dr.
Direnfeld acknowledges the harm of drinking in excess but feels
that a reasonable amount of alcohol, say a glass of wine
per day, will not harm the baby.
It is true that all of the evidence has
not yet been gathered, but it is difficult not to see the logic
of the conclusion of the Wine Spectator: When it comes to
drinking, evidence demands interpretations and decisions require
judgment. Women are capable of choosing for themselves.

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